A simple "airbag" theory of Life After Death

[quote=“kurvature66, post:326, topic:7725”]
Why the hell do you think the entire world has been talking about it for 10,000 years for chrissakes!!

You don’t know the half of it. The world has been talking about an “invisible enemy” in the sky since before homo sapiens made its entrance . This is ancient fight or flight mechanism has been a survival strategy much longer than the emergence of mammals. It is a hard wired engram in our very cytoskeleton (microtubules).

Just consider the mechanics of single celled pseudopods and their defensive response to external irritation or active response to positive external stimulus.
We don’t even know yet how that happens because until recently we have not been able to look at nano scale objects. The electron microscope has changed all that .

… This is a 21st-century, not the 20th century, wake up! The controversy is over, there actually is a physically REAL God, and scientific measurement by an army of researchers in 20 languages worldwide has now proved it experimentally to 2 decimal points. Get over it!
GH

You’re right, this is the 21st century, not the 100th millenia before even the first depictions of sky beings were drawn on the walls of caves.

All natural phenomen once attributed to God have been debunked and replaced by deterministic relational physics and mathematical equations. There is no motivated metaphysical agency other than deterministic mathematical processes. Get over it!

God is Old. Even the NT has replaced God with a human being. Old God is obsolete.
Several Popes have declared that Darwinian evolution is true, debunking their own story of Adam and Eve and reducing it to

Do you think you can rewrite the history of both theism AND science at the same time?

Try a different approach and focus attention on the behavior of viruses, rather than people.

The secret social lives of viruses

Scientists are listening in on the ways viruses communicate and cooperate. Decoding what the microbes are saying could be a boon to human health.

Molecular biologist Bonnie Bassler and her graduate student Justin Silpe have found that viruses can use quorum-sensing chemicals released by bacteria to determine when best to start multiplying — and murdering9. Jun 18, 2019

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-019-01880-6